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GraphQLDocs

Easily generate beautiful documentation from your GraphQL schema.

sample

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'graphql-docs'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install graphql-docs

Usage

Simple! Call GraphQLDocs.generate, taking care to pass in the GraphQL endpoint:

GraphQLDocs.build(url: 'http://graphql.org/swapi-graphql/')

If your GraphQL endpoint requires authentication, you can provide a username or password, or an access token:

options = {
  url: 'http://graphql.org/swapi-graphql/'
  login: 'gjtorikian',
  password: 'lolnowai'
}
GraphQLDocs.build(options)

options = {
  url: 'http://graphql.org/swapi-graphql/'
  access_token: 'something123'
}

GraphQLDocs.build(options)

If you already have the JSON locally, great! Call the same method with path instead:

GraphQLDocs.build(path: 'location/to/sw-api.json')

Breakdown

There are several phases going on in one little GraphQLDocs.build call:

  • The GraphQL JSON is fetched (if you passed url) through GraphQL::Client (or simply read if you passed path).
  • GraphQL::Parser manipulates that JSON into a slightly saner format.
  • GraphQL::Generator takes that JSON and converts it into HTML.
  • GraphQL::Renderer technically runs as part of the generation phase. It passes the contents of each page through a Markdown renderer.

If you wanted to, you could break these calls up individually. For example:

options = {}
options[:path] = "#{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/../data/graphql/docs.json"
my_renderer = MySuperCoolRenderer(options)
options[:renderer] = my_renderer

options = GraphQLDocs::Configuration::GRAPHQLDOCS_DEFAULTS.merge(options)

response = File.read(options[:path])

parser = GraphQLDocs::Parser.new(response, options)
parsed_schema = parser.parse

generator = GraphQLDocs::Generator.new(parsed_schema, options)

generator.generate

Generating output

By default, the HTML generation process uses ERB to layout the content. There are a bunch of default options provided for you, but feel free to override any of these. The Configuration section below has more information on what you can change.

It also uses html-pipeline to perform the Markdown rendering by default. You can override this by providing a custom rendering class. initialize takes two arguments, the configuration options and the parsed schema. You must implement at least one method, render, which takes the GraphQL type, the name, and the layout contents. For example:

class CustomRenderer
  def initialize(options, parsed_schema)
    @options = options
    @parsed_schema = parsed_schema
  end

  def render(type, name, contents)
    contents.sub(/Repository/i, 'Meow Woof!')
  end
end

options[:path] = 'location/to/sw-api.json'
options[:renderer] = CustomRenderer

GraphQLDocs.build(options)

Helper methods

In your ERB layouts, there are several helper methods you can use. The helper methods are:

  • slugify(str) - This slugifies the given string.
  • include(filename, opts) - This embeds a template from your includes folder, passing along the local options provided.
  • markdown(string) - This converts a string from Markdown to HTML.
  • format_type(field) - This formats a type into an IDL-like representation. For example: !Blah or [!Foo].
  • graphql_mutation_types, graphql_object_types, graphql_interface_types, graphql_enum_types, graphql_union_types, graphql_input_object_types, graphql_scalar_types - Collections of the various GraphQL types.

To call these methods within templates, you must use the dot notation, such as <%= slugify.(text) %>.

Configuration

The following options are available:

Option Description Default
access_token Uses this token while making requests through GraphQLDocs::Client. nil
login Uses this login while making requests through GraphQLDocs::Client. nil
password Uses this password while making requests through GraphQLDocs::Client. nil
path GraphQLDocs::Client loads a JSON file found at this location, representing the response from an introspection query. nil
url GraphQLDocs::Client makes a POST request to this URL, passing along the introspection query. nil
output_dir The location of the output HTML. ./output/
use_default_styles Indicates if you want to use the default styles. true
base_url Indicates the base URL to prepend for assets and links. true
delete_output Deletes output_dir before generating content. false
pipeline_config Defines two sub-keys, pipeline and context, which are used by html-pipeline when rendering your output. pipeline has ExtendedMarkdownFilter, EmojiFilter, and TableOfContentsFilter. context has gfm: false and asset_root set to GitHub's CDN.
renderer The rendering class to use. GraphQLDocs::Renderer
templates The templates to use when generating HTML. You may override any of the following keys: default, includes, objects, mutations, interfaces, enums, unions, input_objects, scalars. The defaults are found in lib/graphql-docs/layouts/.
landing_pages The landing page to use when generating HTML for each type. You may override any of the following keys: index, query, object, mutation, interface, enum, union, input_object, scalar. The defaults are found in lib/graphql-docs/layouts/.
classes Additional class names you can provide to certain elements. The full list is found in lib/graphql-docs/configuration.rb/.

Development

After checking out the repo, run script/bootstrap to install dependencies. Then, run rake test to run the tests. You can also run bundle exec rake console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

Sample site

Clone this repository and run:

bundle exec rake sample

to see some sample output.

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Easily generate beautiful documentation from your GraphQL schema.

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